Buenos Aires Cathedral Photo by longhorndave |
In
1979, my grandfather wrote the first English-language biography of the new
Polish pope, and he entitled it ‘The Man From Cracow’. The new pope of 2013 is,
then, the man from Buenos Aires .
“It seems my brother cardinals have gone to the ends of the earth” to find a
pontiff, Pope Francis said on Rome ’s
most famous balcony last night. When I first flew into Buenos
Aires , it did indeed look like that – a city on the far edge
of the Atlantic, surrounded by a vast South American plain, lapped by the brown
waters of the Rio de la Plata delta.
Those who write
on South America’s troubled 20th century will have their own perspectives
on what the election yesterday of the cardinal-archbishop of Buenos Aires, Cardinal Jorge Mario Bergoglio (b.1936), as pope means. For a historian of the early modern church, however, this feels like a
moment when two great legacies of the 16th century have finally struck home in Rome . The 16th
century was of course the period in which the Roman church, after tentative beginnings
with new dioceses in the Mid-Atlantic isles in the 15th century,
went truly global. Throughout the brutal Spanish conquest of South
America , the conquistadores were followed by Catholic
missionaries, who baptised the subjects of the defeated Aztec, Inca and Maya rulers in their millions. Buenos Aires , on the southern,
coastal fringes of that Spanish continental empire, was founded in the 1530s, and in
1620 Pedro Carranza was named the very first bishop of the diocese of Rio de la Plata .
The sixteenth century
also saw the birth of what is perhaps the Catholic Church’s most famous
religious order, the Society of Jesus, or Jesuits. Founded by the Spanish
ex-solider Ignatius Loyola, and officially launched with a papal bull of 1540,
the Jesuits specialised from the outset in mission work – in Protestant areas
of Europe, in what they saw as the un-evangelised rural heartlands of Catholic
Europe, in Japan, China, and of course the Americas. They were particularly
active in the areas we now call Paraguay
and Argentina , setting up
networks of missions deep in the interior, founding the Jesuit college of Cordoba in 1611. In over half a millennium
of high-profile activity, the Society of Jesus, this distinctive product of the 16C Roman church, never produced a pope.
So, when on
Tuesday an archbishop of Buenos Aires and a
Jesuit is enthroned as bishop of Rome ,
we need to look to the 16th century to grasp the long-term
trajectories which have led Cardinal Bergoglio to the papacy. His church has
never recovered the religious monopoly in Western and Central Europe which it
lost with the 16C Reformation, but the story of this particular papacy begins
in 16C Spanish America . We can only guess what
Pedro Carranza, as he began the construction of Buenos Aires’ first cathedral
by the brown river in the 1620s, or Argentina’s only beato, the Mapuche
Ceferino Namancura, a pious teenager who died of tuberculosis in Rome in
1905, would have made of the idea of a pope from Argentina. However, for
Christianity, which itself came to Rome from the
imperial margins, a pope from the periphery of Spain ’s pioneering global empire
seems a historically apt choice.
The man from Buenos Aires Photo by Catholic Church England & Wales |
A really fascinating article. Almost as if to have a Jesuit Pope the Jesuits had to leave Europe, and go to South America before ending-up back in Europe in Rome 401 years later. And an excellent choice for a Pope.
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Yes, it's a rather roundabout way of doing it, isn't it?
ReplyDeleteThat reminds me of a novel by Shusaku Endo, 'The Samurai', about a group of Jesuits and their Japanese converts who, in the sixteenth century, travel from Japan, via Mexico, to Rome, and back again.